Here’s Where It Gets Interesting
Education
On the last episode in our series, Momentum, Sharon ties up a few loose ends. The 1950s was a decade full of change, but the Civil Rights Movement didn’t end when the calendar flipped to 1960. Most of the people we’ve followed throughout this series continued their crusade for–or against–civil freedoms well into the next several decades.
We hear about Barbara Johns and the next steps in integrated schooling, about Earl Warren and the gains his Supreme Court made in the 60s. We also learn about the reason behind his rift with J. Edgar Hoover, and how the FBI evolved over the years. Finally, Sharon returns to a Civil Rights power player, and we visit her in a new city, and with a new approach to activism.
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BONUS Episode! Re:Thinking with Adam Grant: If Teachers Took Over the Government with Sharon McMahon
The History of Our Fears and Obsessions with Kate Summerscale
A Man of Iron with Troy Senik
All That Is Wicked with Kate Dawson
An Independent Influencer in a Two-Party System with Evan McMullin
Resilience: Your Questions Answered
Resilience: An Interview with George Takei Pt. 2
Resilience: An Interview with George Takei Pt. 1
Resilience: Redress and Reparation
Resilience: The Fear of What Comes Next
Resilience: All the Way to the Supreme Court
Resilience: The Spirit of Resistance
Resilience: The Long Days of Camp Life
Resilience: Only What You Can Carry
Resilience: The Forced Removal of 120 Thousand Japanese Americans
Resilience: A Country at War
Resilience: Japan Attacks Pearl Harbor
Resilience: The Movement of Japan in the East
Resilience: The Patriotic Lives of the Issei and Nisei
Resilience: Asian Immigration and the American West Coast
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